Stanford forward Chiney Ogwumike (13) is sandwiched next to Oregon forward Liz Brenner (15) in the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in Stanford, Calif., Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012. Stanford won 93-70. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

Photo: Paul Sakuma, Associated Press

Stanford forward Chiney Ogwumike (13) is sandwiched next to Oregon...

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Stanford forward Nnemkadi Ogwumike (30) and Oregon guard Jasmin Holliday (30) position for a rebound in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Stanford, Calif., Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

Photo: Paul Sakuma, Associated Press

Stanford forward Nnemkadi Ogwumike (30) and Oregon guard Jasmin...

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Stanford guard Toni Kokenis, right, talks with forward Nnemkadi Ogwumike, left, late in the second half against Oregon in an NCAA college basketball game in Stanford, Calif., Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012. Ogwumike contributed 30 points as Stanford won 93-70.

Photo: Paul Sakuma, Associated Press

Stanford guard Toni Kokenis, right, talks with forward Nnemkadi...

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Stanford forward Nnemkadi Ogwumike (30) scores against Oregon in the second half of an NCAA college basketball game in Stanford, Calif., Thursday, Jan. 5, 2012. Ogwumike contributed 30 points as Stanford won 93-70. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

Ten minutes, 42 seconds into Stanford's 93-70 win against Westhead's Oregon Ducks, the Cardinal's Nneka Ogwumike already had her third straight double-double and eighth of the season. Twelve minutes in, teammate Bonnie Samuelson had hit five of her six three-pointers. In the first four minutes of the second half, Taylor Greenfield pumped in 11 points after a scoreless first half.

Westhead is the standard-bearer for run-and-gun coaching, but his Ducks could not sprint away from a Stanford team that can play Paul Ball, too. The fourth-ranked Cardinal (12-1, 3-0) opened their Pac-12 home schedule with their 60th straight conference win and 14th in a row against Oregon (9-6, 1-2).

Ogwumike finished with 32 points and 15 rebounds. Three more boards will make her the fifth Cardinal to reach 1,000.

Samuelson and Greenfield, both freshmen, combined for 11 of Stanford's 14 three-pointers and had 18 and 17 points, respectively. (The Cardinal set a school record with 42 three-point attempts.)

"We're very comfortable playing up-tempo," Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer said. "I don't think the team was tired. We have depth. I liked the pace. I liked how fast we were playing."

Westhead's philosophy is "shoot now, ask questions later." No team in the Pac-12 approaches the 1,066 shots Oregon has attempted this year. But Stanford outshot Oregon 81-68 and scored 50 points in a dizzying second half.

VanDerveer even said Ogwumike did not have her "A-game." Indeed, Westhead was happy with his team's containment of the All-America candidate and was surprised to see her line in the boxscore.

"What hurt the most was, she got eight offensive rebounds," Westhead said. "Samuelson hit six three-pointers. Take that away, and we might still be playing. I think we did a terrific job on Nneka. Wow. She's a pretty good player. She got 32 points? We did a good job on her."

However, Oregon failed to contain Stanford's freshman sharpshooters, Samuelson and Greenfield, who continued to get open looks as they hit three after three. Samuelson had such a hot hand that she hit her final trey off the glass.